Saturday, January 10, 1998 Published at 15:40 GMTWorld: AmericasClinton calls for human cloning banClinton: "scientific advancement does not occur in a moral vacuum"

The US President, Bill Clinton, has urged Congress to pass a ban on human
cloning experiments for at least five years.

A Chicago-area physicist, Richard Seed, caused uproar this
week when he said he was ready to set up a clinic to clone human
babies and predicted that as many as 200,000 human clones a year
would be produced once his process was perfected.

"It's good to remember that scientific advancement does not
occur in a moral vacuum," Mr Clinton said in his weekly radio
address to the nation.

"Technological developments divorced from values will not
bring us one step closer to meeting the challenges or reaping
the benefits of the 21st century," Mr Clinton said.

Last June the President sent Congress legislation that
would ban human cloning for at least five years.

Mr Clinton said
the need for passing the legislation was more urgent than ever.

"Unfortunately, Congress has not yet acted on this
legislation," he said. "Yet, it's now clearer than ever the
legislation is exactly what is needed."

"This week, like many Americans, I learned the profoundly troubling news that a member of the scientific community is actually laying plans to clone a human being," Mr Clinton said.

"Personally, I believe that human cloning raises deep
concerns."

So far most scientists have refrained from
experimenting with human cloning but Mr Clinton warned that "we know
it's possible for some to ignore the consensus of their
colleagues and proceed without regard for our common values."

"So today, again, I call on Congress to act now to make it
illegal for anyone to clone a human being."

The President issued an executive order last year banning the use
of any federal money for human cloning research.

Several states have begun looking at a ban on human cloning,
including Illinois, Ohio, Wisconsin and Connecticut.

Mr Seed said if the United States outlawed human
cloning, he would set up his operation elsewhere - mentioning
Mexico, the Cayman Islands or the Bahamas as possible
alternatives.

The idea of genetically manipulated human beings came a step
closer last March with the announcement that a sheep named Dolly
had been cloned by scientists working in Scotland. They produced the animal from an adult cell fused with an egg.